Street Players

Look inside
From the mind of Donald Goines, one of the most influential, bestselling Black authors to date, comes a edition reissue of his timeless, page-turning, bullet-riddled tale…

The bad news: He was born on the streets.
The good news: No one can keep him down.
The bad bad news: It’s about to get real.

Detroit, 1970s. Needles glitter the ground. Guns pop 24/7. Everyone’s working an angle, especially the cops. Out of this gritty urban nightmare, one man rises from the filth, ready to seize his destiny by any means necessary . . .

With ice in his veins and a stable of women to keep his money rolls thick and plenty, Earl the Black Pearl has every intention of staying at the top of the brutal empire he created. But when someone starts picking off his crew, all hell is about to break loose—because Earl isn’t letting anyone threaten what he’s worked so hard to build. With the streets about to blow up into a violent free-for-all, Earl knows what he has to do—take the enemy down, or die trying . . .
Praise for Donald Goines

“A true master at depicting street life in its rawest, most authentic form, Mr. Goines mastered the art of storytelling from the darkest corner of America: the ghetto. His brilliance still shines through and touches the soul of modern black culture.” —JaQuavis Coleman, New York Times bestselling author

“Donald Goines is the most iconic voice in urban fiction. His masterful pen is timeless.” —Ashley Antoinette, New York Times bestselling author

“I learned to read on Donald Goines. His books are classics.” —Carl Weber, New York Times bestselling author and founder of Urban Books

“A timeless writer, Donald Goines laid the foundation for all who came after. Fifty years later, his novels continue to inspire urban fiction from one generation to the next.” —Wahida Clark, New York Times bestselling author

“Machiavelli was my tutor, Donald Goines my father figure.” Tupac Shakur

“The voice of the ghetto itself.” The Village Voice

“He lived by the code of the streets and his books vividly recreated the street jungle and its predators.” New Jersey Voice

“Donald Goines is one of Hip Hop’s Greatest Inspirations.” The Source Magazine

“The godfather of black pulp fiction.” —Salon.com

“Goines put you right there in the action.” —AllHipHop.com

“Donald Goines, a brilliant writer of street literature, captures the pain of addiction perfectly.” Black Enterprise, The 18 Best Books of All Time
 
“Goines’s influence on hip-hop, pulp-fiction, movies, and scores of authors deserves as much praise as a James Baldwin or Richard Wright, who also wrote about Black life in the ghetto.” —Darryl Robertson, hip hop journalist

“Donald Goines was for the streets [in the 70s] what the rappers are today. . . . He was in the streets, of the streets and spoke for the streets.” —Chaz Williams, CEO of Black Hand Entertainment

“Donald Goines has become, decades after his death, one of the most influential African-American authors in the African-American literary canon.” —Thumpers Corner
Donald Goines was born in Detroit, Michigan. He joined the U.S. Air Force instead of going into his family’s dry cleaning business. Following his service, he entered into a life of drug addiction and crime. He received seven prison sentences, serving a total of over six years. While he was in prison, Goines wrote his first two novels, Dopefiend: The Story of a Black Junkie and Whoreson: The Story of a Ghetto Pimp. Goines was shot to death in 1974. View titles by Donald Goines

About

From the mind of Donald Goines, one of the most influential, bestselling Black authors to date, comes a edition reissue of his timeless, page-turning, bullet-riddled tale…

The bad news: He was born on the streets.
The good news: No one can keep him down.
The bad bad news: It’s about to get real.

Detroit, 1970s. Needles glitter the ground. Guns pop 24/7. Everyone’s working an angle, especially the cops. Out of this gritty urban nightmare, one man rises from the filth, ready to seize his destiny by any means necessary . . .

With ice in his veins and a stable of women to keep his money rolls thick and plenty, Earl the Black Pearl has every intention of staying at the top of the brutal empire he created. But when someone starts picking off his crew, all hell is about to break loose—because Earl isn’t letting anyone threaten what he’s worked so hard to build. With the streets about to blow up into a violent free-for-all, Earl knows what he has to do—take the enemy down, or die trying . . .

Reviews

Praise for Donald Goines

“A true master at depicting street life in its rawest, most authentic form, Mr. Goines mastered the art of storytelling from the darkest corner of America: the ghetto. His brilliance still shines through and touches the soul of modern black culture.” —JaQuavis Coleman, New York Times bestselling author

“Donald Goines is the most iconic voice in urban fiction. His masterful pen is timeless.” —Ashley Antoinette, New York Times bestselling author

“I learned to read on Donald Goines. His books are classics.” —Carl Weber, New York Times bestselling author and founder of Urban Books

“A timeless writer, Donald Goines laid the foundation for all who came after. Fifty years later, his novels continue to inspire urban fiction from one generation to the next.” —Wahida Clark, New York Times bestselling author

“Machiavelli was my tutor, Donald Goines my father figure.” Tupac Shakur

“The voice of the ghetto itself.” The Village Voice

“He lived by the code of the streets and his books vividly recreated the street jungle and its predators.” New Jersey Voice

“Donald Goines is one of Hip Hop’s Greatest Inspirations.” The Source Magazine

“The godfather of black pulp fiction.” —Salon.com

“Goines put you right there in the action.” —AllHipHop.com

“Donald Goines, a brilliant writer of street literature, captures the pain of addiction perfectly.” Black Enterprise, The 18 Best Books of All Time
 
“Goines’s influence on hip-hop, pulp-fiction, movies, and scores of authors deserves as much praise as a James Baldwin or Richard Wright, who also wrote about Black life in the ghetto.” —Darryl Robertson, hip hop journalist

“Donald Goines was for the streets [in the 70s] what the rappers are today. . . . He was in the streets, of the streets and spoke for the streets.” —Chaz Williams, CEO of Black Hand Entertainment

“Donald Goines has become, decades after his death, one of the most influential African-American authors in the African-American literary canon.” —Thumpers Corner

Author

Donald Goines was born in Detroit, Michigan. He joined the U.S. Air Force instead of going into his family’s dry cleaning business. Following his service, he entered into a life of drug addiction and crime. He received seven prison sentences, serving a total of over six years. While he was in prison, Goines wrote his first two novels, Dopefiend: The Story of a Black Junkie and Whoreson: The Story of a Ghetto Pimp. Goines was shot to death in 1974. View titles by Donald Goines